The majority of cancer mortality arises because tumors cells leave their primary site, giving rise to metastatic
tumors in other organs. While there are many and complex biologic aspects of tumor progression leading to
cancer metastasis, local invasion through the basement membrane of epithelia and migration of primary tumor
cells through the extracellular matrix (ECM) to access lymphatic and vascular channels is clearly a critical early
step. Tumor cells can invade and migrate individually or as groups. Accumulating pathologic and in vivo
experimental evidence now indicates that the most common form of tumor cell migration is likely as a collective
group. While we have learned a great deal about the cell biologic, biochemical, and biophysical mechanisms
underlying the migration of individual cells in 2D, 3D and in vivo, our understanding about the regulation of
collective cell migration in cancer metastasis is at an early stage. Organization of cells into collective groups
and their migration of cells is governed by a number of forces: passive (elastic and adhesive forces), frictional
(resistance to cells sliding past one another and cells sliding across a substrate), active (protrusive and
contractile forces), and traction forces upon the underlying or surrounding ECM. Which forces are critical for
the collective migration of tumor cells, and how, is not understood. The overarching hypothesis of this proposal
is that cell-ECM and cell-cell interactions will combine through adhesion crosstalk to modulate tumor collective
cell migration by altering cooperativity of motion and force generation. To test this hypothesis we have
developed computational tools and 2D and in vivo 3D experimental models that measure various physical
forces within and around a group of tumor cells as they organize to migrate in a collective through the tumor
stroma and within the tumor epithelium. Our approach to the problem is iterative: using computational
simulations to inform experimental testing of how various forces contribute to the organization and motion of
collective groups of tumor cells. We propose four specific aims using these tools to address this problem: Aim
1. To determine an integrated experimental and computational model of how tumor cell-intrinsic changes in
adhesion influence collective migration. Aim 2. To determine how changes in the tumor environment affect
collective migration of tumor cell. Aim 3. To determine how cell-cell and cell-ECM forces influence the nature
of tumor cell collective migration in clinically relevant primary human breast tumor samples. Aim 4. To develop
a computational model of collective cell migration dynamics in tissues.
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